Litcius/Paper detail

Emotional distress in neuro-ICU survivor–caregiver dyads: The recovering together randomized clinical trial.

Sarah Bannon, Talea Cornelius, Melissa Gates, Ethan G. Lester, Ryan A. Mace, Paula Popok, Eric A. Macklin, Jonathan Rosand, Ana‐Maria Vranceanu

2021Health Psychology29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Emotional distress is common in both survivors and their informal caregivers following admission to a neuroscience intensive care unit (Neuro-ICU) and can negatively affect their individual recovery and quality of life. Neuro-ICU survivor-caregiver dyads can influence each other's emotional distress over time, but whether such influence emerges during dyadic treatment remains unknown. The present study involved secondary data analysis of Neuro-ICU dyads enrolled in a randomized clinical trial of a dyadic resiliency intervention, Recovering Together (RT), versus a health education attention placebo control to test dyadic similarities in emotional distress before and after treatment. METHOD: Data were collected from 58 dyads following Neuro-ICU admission. Emotional distress (depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress) was assessed at baseline, 6 weeks (postintervention), and 12 weeks later. Nonindependence within survivor-caregiver dyads was examined (i.e., correlations between cross-sectional symptoms and changes in symptoms over time); mutual influence of emotional functioning over time (i.e., "partner effects") was examined using cross-lagged path analyses. RESULTS: There were strong, positive cross-sectional correlations between survivor and caregiver distress at postintervention and follow-up and between changes in survivor and caregiver distress from baseline to postintervention and postintervention to follow-up. There were no partner effects. CONCLUSIONS: Neuro-ICU survivors and their informal caregivers show similar changes in emotional distress after treatment. These findings highlight the potential benefits of intervening on both survivor and caregiver distress following Neuro-ICU admission. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Randomized controlled trialDistressPsychologyIntervention (counseling)Quality of life (healthcare)Emotional distressClinical psychologyClinical trialMedicinePsychiatryAnxietyPsychotherapistPathologySurgeryIntensive Care Unit Cognitive DisordersFamily and Patient Care in Intensive Care UnitsPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
Emotional distress in neuro-ICU survivor–caregiver dyads: The recovering together randomized clinical trial. | Litcius